First Air Flight 6560 was carrying 15 people when it crashed near Resolute Bay, Nunavut, on Aug. 20, killing 12, including four crew members, the six-year-old granddaughter of the man who chartered the flight and several workers from outside the territory.

Williamson, 23, found seven-year-old Gabrielle near the crash site with a broken leg, and carried her away from the devastation, RCMP Sgt. Paul Soloman said.

"It's amazing they survived such a thing," he said.

Nunavut Premier Eva Aariak said the loss was particularly hard for many in the closely knit northern towns and hamlets.

"We have 25 communities in Nunavut and we always feel the pain and loss of those who perished as if they were part of our community," she said. "We have such a connectedness in all of our communities. So our hearts and thoughts go out to all those affected throughout and especially those in Resolute."

An acclaimed Arctic researcher, Marty Bergmann was headed to Resolute Bay to give Prime Minister Stephen Harper a tour of a new research facility. The father of four was director of Natural Resources Canada's Polar Continental Shelf Program and lived in Winnipeg.

Family friend Michelle Anderson said Bergmann used to build hockey rinks for his children and was passionate about Canada's North.

"He would do anything for his family," she said. "He was the kind of guy who dreamed big in all areas of his life."

Harper issued a news release Monday paying tribute to Bergmann.

"His legacy will live on in the science benefiting Northern families and in exercising Canada's sovereignty over its Arctic territories," he said.

Cheyenne Eckalook

Cheyenne Eckalook, six, was travelling with her seven-year-old sister Gabrielle Pelky to Resolute Bay after a summer trip to British Columbia. Cheyenne was killed in the crash, but Gabrielle survived with a broken leg and cuts to her face.

Their grandfather, Aziz Kheraj, owns the South Camp Inn in Resolute and said he had chartered the flight, adding he lost six staff members in the crash.

Ann Marie Chassie

Ann Marie Chassie, 42, was a flight attendant with First Air for 22 years. She lived in Yellowknife.

The mother of two also worked part time as a nurse at the Stanton Territorial Hospital in Yellowknife.

Allison Butz told CBC News that Chassie used to babysit her.

"I've known her since I was a baby, she's been a family friend for years," Butz said. "She's just a great person, a single mom."

Steve Girouard

Steve Girouard was a passenger on board First Air Flight 6560 and lived in New Brunswick. His fiancée, Lise Lamoureux, was also killed in the crash.

Girouard was originally from Village-Saint-Laurent, a small community in northeastern New Brunswick, local media reported.

Lise Lamoureux

Lamoureux was from Bathurst, N.B. Bathurst Mayor Stephen Brunet visited her family on Aug. 22 to express his condolences. He said she was excited about a job she had just taken in Nunavut. It was her first time flying.

David Hare

David Hare, 35, lived in Yellowknife and was the first officer on the flight. He was married with three daughters — the youngest just one month old.

"Flying was his passion and he took it very, very seriously," his sister, Julie Garner, said.

Ute Merritt lived in Yellowknife and was a flight attendant on the First Air passenger-cargo plane. (Family photo)

Ute Merritt

Yellowknife resident Ute Merritt, 55, was a flight attendant on First Air 6560. She leaves behind her husband, who is also a pilot, and five children.

Family friend Jan Fullerton said Merritt had a passion for sailing and a joy for life.

"Just a warm person," Fullerton said. "A beautiful person to know."

Raymond Pitre

New Brunswick construction worker Raymond Pitre was headed to Resolute Bay after friends in the Arctic found him a job in the North doing drywall work.

The 39-year-old had never been on a plane, and had to muster the courage to get on Flight 6560, his mother-in-law Donna Temple said.

"He was nervous and afraid ... but he said, 'I'm going,'" Temple said.

Pitre had a wife and five children.

Randy Reid

Randy Reid worked as a cook at Resolute's South Camp Inn owned by Aziz Kheraj, whose six-year-old granddaughter died in the Aug. 20 crash.

Reid was married and lived in Sault Ste. Marie, according to an article on SooToday.com. His wife, Pierrette Perreault-Reid, said he had been working at the South Camp Inn for 13 years.

Michael Rideout

Michael Rideout, 65, lived in Mount Pearl, Nfld. but regularly commuted to work in Canada's North. Rideout was an electrician at the South Camp Inn in Resolute.

Miraculously, Rideout had survived another plane crash three years ago, along with Ches Tibbo, who also died when flight 6560 went down on Aug. 20. Rideout was also on a plane that crashed 30 years ago in Churchill Falls in Labrador. Rideout had an enduring fear of flight as a result.

"He told me when you get on these planes there's no guarantee," his wife, Anne Rideout, said, adding that her husband continued to fly despite his fears because he needed to earn a living.

Rideout also said her husband planned to retire in December.

"I'd give anything for him to be here," she said.

Blair Rutherford

Blair Rutherford was the pilot on Flight 6560 and lived in Leduc, Alta. He moved to the province from Winnipeg 20 years ago.

Rutherford, 48, was married with two young children.

His wife, Tatiana Rutherford, told CBC News the crash occurred just one day before their 12th wedding anniversary.

"I loved his company, I loved being in the same room as him," Rutherford, who works as a flight attendant with First Air, said of her husband. "I'm going to miss him holding me, I'm going to miss watching him with his kids."

Ches Tibbo

Ches Tibbo turned 49 the day he was killed in a plane crash in Nunavut. (Courtesy Pam Pardy Ghent)

Ches Tibbo was flying back to Nunavut after a visit to Newfoundland for his sister's funeral. Tibbo worked for Aziz Kheraj, whose six-year-old granddaughter also died in the crash.